Description
Muscle and strength have no age limits.
With Building Strength and Muscle After 50, you can benefit from over 30 years of personal training experience from Chad Landers, who has trained high-profile clients such as Duff McKagan, William Zabka, Jerry Cantrell, Stephen Perkins, and Catherine Dent. He will guide you through the physical, hormonal, and mental hurdles that trainees over age 50 encounter in their efforts to build and maintain muscle and definition. Building Strength and Muscle After 50 describes the importance of recovery, the value of resistance training, and the most effective ways to reduce the risk of injury while training. Landers discusses the big three age-related health issues--sarcopenia, metabolism decline, and osteoporosis--and will help you develop an approach to building strength that meets you where you're at. The book contains 76 exercises for the entire body:- 20 chest and back exercises
- 26 shoulder, biceps, and triceps exercises
- 12 core exercises
- 18 hip, thigh, and calf exercises
Whether you're returning to resistance training after a break or you've never picked up a weight before, the step-by-step instructions for each exercise make this an accessible and approachable resource. Chad's Take sections offer ways to maximize results and vary or modify an exercise for your unique goals. With nine programs ranging from two to four lifts per week, you can pick the plan that fits your schedule.
Author: Chad Landers
Publisher: Human Kinetics Publishers
Published: 11/14/2025
Pages: 216
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 1.33lbs
Size: 10.88h x 8.51w x 0.54d
ISBN13: 9781718223882
ISBN10: 1718223889
BISAC Categories:
- Health & Fitness | Exercise | Strength Training
- Health & Fitness | Aging & Longevity
- Sports & Recreation | Bodybuilding & Weightlifting
About the Author
Chad Landers is a 1991 graduate of the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign with a bachelor's degree in kinesiology. He has a graduate diploma in sports nutrition from the International Olympic Committee (IOC) and he was the National Strength and Conditioning Association (NSCA) Personal Trainer of the Year in 2018.

